Fort Pulaski, resembling a medieval castle, is
surrounded by a wide moat, with two drawbridges, and a rear
fortification known as a demilune. After crossing the outer drawbridge,
a short walk through the demilune will bring you to the second
drawbridge and the sally port or only entrance into the main
fortification.

Numbered markers have been placed at significant
points of interest. These markers correspond with the numbers of the
text below and with those shown on the guide map. They should be
followed in consecutive order.

1. THE SALLY PORT. The fort entrance is
equipped with many devices for last-ditch defense. The massive
drawbridge, weighing several tons, is raised by winches and
counterweights which may be seen in the rooms on either side of the
entrance. As the drawbridge rises, a strong wooden grill, called the
portcullis, drops through a slot in the granite lintel overhead. The
heart-pine doors are studded with iron bolts to make it difficult to
chop through them with axes. Within the sally port are two recesses for
the protection of guards and 10 slits, or loopholes,
through the side walls for small arms fire. In time of great danger,
the inner doors could also be shut and barred.

2. THE GORGE. The western, or rear, section of
Fort Pulaski is known as the gorge ("throat") because it contains the
sally port, or entrance of the fort. The living quarters are also in the
gorge. Enlisted men occupied the barracks rooms, or casemates, to the
north of the entrance; officers were quartered in the casemates to the
south of the entrance. The word casemate means a bomb-proof shelter.
Each of the arched chambers surrounding the parade ground is a casemate.
During the Civil War, when a large number of troops was stationed at
Fort Pulaski, most of the enlisted men were quartered in the casemated
gun galleries or in tents. Originally, all of the casemates were closed
in with wooden fronts to provide shelter from rain and cold. The parade
ground, on which the men exercised and drilled, is 2-1/2 acres in
extent. The covered veranda, which runs the length of the gorge, is an
unusual feature in fort architecture.

3. BARRACKS ROOMS. When Georgia troops seized
Fort Pulaski in 1861, the barracks rooms were unfurnished. The
Confederates built triple-decker bunks against the walls and filled
mattress covers with hay from the parade ground. They brought chairs,
tables, and camp cots from their homes in Savannah. After the surrender,
Federal troops added many items of furniture obtained by raiding
plantations along the coast. The rooms were lighted by candles, coal-oil
lanterns, and lamps. The large fireplace in each room was equipped with
a crane and other devices for cooking, but both Confederate and Union
soldiers did most of their cooking on field ranges. While walking
through the barracks rooms, note how the loopholes in the rear wall are
variously angled to give a wide range of fire.

4. THE NORTH MAGAZINE. On the second day of the
bombardment Federal projectiles, exploding near the entrance to this
powder magazine, threatened to blow up the Confederates with their own
powder. The interior walls of the magazine are from 12 to 15 feet
thick.

Bronze howitzer in northwest bastion.

5. THE NORTHWEST BASTION. A bastion is a part of a
fort which extends out from the main wall, with embrasures and loopholes
to permit lateral fire along the walls. Fort Pulaski had only
demibastions, or half bastions, as they extend out only in one direction
and give protection to only one wall. The rectangular openings through
the outer walls of the fort are embrasures to permit the firing of
cannon. The embrasures in the bastions are angled to bring a crossfire
on the main drawbridge and on the point of the demilune. The slot under
each embrasure was to receive the tongue of a gun carriage which was
then held in place by a large iron pin dropped through the round hole in
the floor of the embrasure. The openings in the ceiling above the
embrasures are smoke vents. The circular grooves in the floor originally
held iron tracks on which the wheels of the gun carriages turned. The
slots and grilled trapdoors in the floors of the casemates are to
provide ventilation under the floors. The round pegs in the floor cover
iron spikes that hold the planks in place and originally served to
reduce the hazard of a powder explosion ,when the
guns were in use. Hobnails in soldiers' boots on contact with exposed
spikes might have resulted in a dangerous shower of sparks.

Arched gun galleries.

6. THE GUN GALLERIES. The casemated gun
galleries, which surround the parade ground on four sides and give to
Fort Pulaski the atmosphere of a cloistered monastery, contain fine
examples of brick masonry. The arches were constructed over wooden
forms, each brick being hand cut to fit its special place. The joints
were mortared from above and, when the arches were firm and strong, the
wooden forms were removed.

7. THE WATER SYSTEM. Under the brick
pavements, which replace the wooden floors in the two center casemates
of each gallery, are water cisterns. There are 10 of these
cisterns, or storage tanks, in the fort, each capable of holding
20,000 gallons of water. During rainstorms, water falling on the
top of the fort seeps through about 3 feet of earth and a foot of oyster
shell until it reaches the lead-covered brick roof, whence it is
diverted through pipes to the cisterns. Overflow water from the roof
emerges through weep holes between the arches high on the walls facing
the parade ground.

8. THE TERREPLEIN. The flat surface on top of
the rampart of the fort is called the terreplein and contains brick and
granite platforms for mounting guns. From this high level, guns had a
range of fire greater than those mounted in the casemates below. The
breast-high parapet on the outer edge of the terreplein was for the
protection of both guns and gun crews. The recesses in the parapet wall
were to allow gun carriages to swing freely.

9. TERREPLEIN, EAST ANGLE. From this point a
good view may be obtained of the shore of Tybee Island, from which the
fort was bombarded. The two batteries containing the 10 James
and Parrott rifled guns, which did the principal damage to the fort,
were located on the western point of Tybee just north of the present
highway bridge. The 9 other batteries of mortars and siege guns were at
various places along the shore for 2 miles in the direction of
the lighthouse. The small brick lighthouse on Cockspur Point was built
about 1840 and therefore was a feature of the landscape at the
time of the bombardment.

10. THE PRISON. From October 23, 1864,
to March 4, 1865, the north east, southeast, and part of the south
casemates of Fort Pulaski were used as a military prison.

11. THE BREACH. In three casemates at the
southeast angle there are solid brick walls without embrasures. These
walls were constructed in 1862, after the surrender, by troops of the
48th New York Volunteers to close the breach, or opening,
made by the Federal shot and shell during the bombardment.

12. THE SOUTHWEST BASTION. The interior of the
southwest bastion was destroyed by fire in 1893. This part of the fort
has been left unrestored to show details of the foundation
construction. All arches are completed beneath the floor level and are
laid on a platform of yellow pine timbers, called grillage. The grillage
in turn is supported by yellow pine piles which are driven deep into the
mud of Cockspur Island.

13. HEADQUARTERS (SURRENDER ROOM).
The surrender of Fort Pulaski was executed in the quarters of Col.
Charles H. Olmstead, Confederate commander. In 1925 a lightning
fire destroyed the officers' quarters. This room was restored in
1935.

14. CISTERN ROOM. This room, also destroyed in
the 1925 fire, has been left unrestored to show construction
details. The cylindrical brick structure below floor level is the top of
a water cistern.

15. BOTTLE COLLECTION. Nearly 1,000 bottles were
found in the Fort Pulaski moat when the mud was cleaned out in
1935. These bottles had been thrown into the moat by workmen
building the fort and by Confederate and Union soldiers during the Civil
War. A part of the collection is shown in this room.

16. THE MOAT. The wet ditch, or moat, which
completely surrounds the main fortification and the demilune, varies in
width from 30 to 48 feet. It has an average depth of 7 feet. The
water, brought through a canal from the South Channel of the Savannah
River, is controlled through a series of tide gates. Fish, crabs,
shrimp, oysters, and turtles live in the moat.

17. THE DEMILUNE. The outwork often found at
the rear of a large fortification was originally constructed in a
half-moon shapehence the name demilune. The principal
earthworks in the demilune were built in 1869, after the Civil War, and
contain four powder magazines and passageways connecting gun
emplacements. The detached mound of earth near the entrance to the
demilune was erected in 1893 to protect an underground chamber in which
were placed the controls for electric mines in the main channel of the
Savannah River. This room is kept locked today as it contains a large
and dangerous electric transformer.

The damaged wall.

18. DAMAGED WALL. Evidence of the bombardment
can best be seen from the outside of the fort. The breach through the
southeast angle was repaired in 1862 with a bright-red brick, which, in
contrast to the original brown brick, shows the area of the damage
wrought by the siege guns. The southeastern wall facing Tybee is
pock-marked by shell hits, and many of the balls and projectiles are
still embedded in the brickwork.

19. THE CEMETERY. On the glacis, or north bank
of the demilune moat, a small cemetery was established when the fort was
under construction. Here, during the Civil War, both Confederate and
Union soldiers were temporarily buried. The 8-inch columbiad, which marks
the site, was a Confederate gun damaged in the bombardment.

20. THE WAVING GIRL. Just after the Civil War
a girl was born on Cockspur Island in the former quarters of the
engineer officers. The child was named Florence Martus, and her father
was an ordnance sergeant at Fort Pulaski. From the stone pier on the
north shore of Cockspur Island young Florence first saw the passing
ships going with cargoes to the farthest corners of the earth. The small
child was fascinated by these gay ships and waved her handkerchief.
Sailors on the ships waved back. A few years later, the child, then in
her 'teens, went to live .with her brother, a light keeper, in a
white cottage close by the riverbank, about 5 miles up river from Fort
Pulaski. From this time on she waved at every ship that
passeda table cloth or towel by day, a lantern by night. For
more than 44 years she never missed a ship, and each ship, as it passed,
returned her salute with three blasts of the whistle. Many stories were
told of this small girl, who finally grew to be a white-haired old lady.
These legends of the Waving Girl of Savannah are known in all the seas
where ships have sailed.